56 not only a sheet ..... AN IDEA * "-- dj ,{:: ;:wi , d!;:ß1t(;at(f \ ",:-ßi":J ITH so much of our production on war " .', ',,'; ,,::.. .. ','\:,' ' '" materials, W amsutta Sheets may not be found as easily today as formerly. When they are, ho,,,"'ever, they are still c-(' The Finest of Cottons." . . . For W amsutta Supercale* stands for an idea and an ideaL.:. To the brides of yesterday, today, and tomorrow, Wamsutta Supercale is The Trousseau Sheet of America" . . . a bridal tradition to be cherished, a hope to be fulfilled - if not today, then when this is over. J\Iay that be soon! W AMSUTTA J\.fILLS, New Bedford J\.fassachusetts. Wamsutta S Up!!.!.:, le Sheets and said that Colonel Bowen wanted to see the men, and they climhed up, hold- ing on to the banister and resting as much weight on their hands as possible. I could hear the fair man saying, " \ XT ' h . . '\ e ve got to put out t at warnIng Im- mediately." After a few minutes the lieutenant came down again and sent one of the men out to get the medics' ambulance. "The Colonel doesn't know quite what to make of them," he said. "They seem to be all right, but he says they might be spies. So he wants to send them up to G 2 at Corps tonight. They'll be comfortable in the ambulance." Corps, as Norgaard and I knew, was near T ebessa, in Algeria, a hundred miles away. Driving over the narrow road, partly through rocky hills, with- out lights, an ambulance would be lucky to make it in six hours. Norgaard and I had one jeep, with an Army driver) between us. \Ve decided that we ought to follow the ambulance to Tebessa. \Ve hurried over to barracks to get our bed- rolls and our driver, whose name was Eddie. He was a good-natured pfc froln Queens who had been impressed by the tales of war he had heard in Algiers and was now being stuffed with horror stories by the infantrymen with w hOITI he had taken up quarters in Gafsa. He looked relieved when we told him we M r.f , ' were getting out of there, even though . it meant a cold night drive. It didn't % take long to roll our bedding and get it into the rear seat of the jeep. When ill; three men carry three bedrolls in a jeep, it means that the men all ride in the front seat. 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 BACK THE ATTACK - WITH WAR BONDS HIli........... ........, '.. ....,'" ...,.. ,:"111 ;,"::':::'::::, ::@::::::;': ::wm :gi 'lC I..'" Jl'" ' *r"' "'N,.,m', ..,...".,."__,,w,w.v,w..,','..'.,w u .. N'W"' .f''^' . " f( " .." ' ..;::' '% ' i""""'-<': <' :'::: : '..... '. :: .: ::: ::: .f. ì: :: :!:: ::;:;:: fr :'; ':. :: ; i . "",:.;. : ....:::: :W tf :""'::.., : ,.... : 4;;: :...,',. " : : þ: 1 :: : ; ., ;; :? ft..,: . . :'.:\*) . "y -.':':.. :'- : (i;:," ..... :,.: 0:- : ;::",'IJ/t ',:' ' L<:$' ,,: $:::::-::...,.,.:...:-::::=:: .. .' . ::::.. '::;"..' , '3'<; :: :: -,; .'\I V';;c t: ,. >, :' \ , ,,,: "," '... ' ...:.... t'.? <:: !): .., i .. ::r::r'l}? ....... ":.' ':{, .,;,; :::::' J ';.:F:::: :.'. .-:':', .. .--, rIJ:ii:.ël.Gt .Y!lI1X.t'!EB',::: :;, , :;.:,:';Ó :::m:;i=ri:i:a: ;ò;r;e::f :::,:.:.:-:....:.':::;':.:: '::'.':' ..:...,..:::::.':: ::::: :::'.., ..:::::: ::.:.:.:::.:. .:<: , ,::.,...::"::::::'::. . ';'::': '.' :: ::'::' :::::? " '. .::::' :::':::: ":,, "::.::::. . : :..; ,:: :'" .; :'::..";:, . :::::: ':::' -.t t 4'i,.têttt cì) hr {J\ ItÃ ::: :I'iî": :J : :tø;fÅiJ;.:t: ::: \ Q: :: :lj :p:: :i:::;",,":: :r::Q';: : ; : : , : , , : :: ': , : , ,:: g '" ..:, " " , ..':::: , : . , . ' , ' N :: :: ' :" 11 ':::::. R "" U " ':': 1 E [ ", E ;'" ":' Ð ': : ..', ,'.' ....:' " " :.-. ". ,',' :' .. .: t: "': =-= :: .... ' . :::' . .,.:? .. :? :;/: :::.: , :. .::::... :,... , , ", ,: '.:. :.... ):: ":::: .' , , ::..,. .:: ::.... :.' :.:' ::: .: .",':: , ,tf) II F !WI R :"l f í1 if ;ßt . 'Y\QI: ,::::,:..:' ":; ió:, W HEN we gut back to the Rôtel de France, we learned that the ambulance had not yet arrived. \Y" e found the thre officers from the Eighth Army in the kitchen, drinking hot coffee and surrounded 2Y officers and men who were asking them about the desert. I '.. spoke to the man with the bandaged :: head, and he told me that the fair-haired :: chap, Sadl r, was the only commissioned officer of the three, a lieutenant. The two others were sergeants. They all belonged to an organization known as the SAS, which stood for Special Air ", Service. I asked him if it had any- ;,:::, thing to do with the RAF and he said no, it was an air service in a negative way. "You see, when we were first :::i f<? med, we used to specialize ,in destroy- "'J ing German airplanes on the ground," he said. "Get back of their lines, get on to IJ an airfield at night-do in a sentry, you << know, or something of that sort; it's z easy-and then attach penèil bombs to as n1any planes as we cuuld get to. The